A flowery start to Spring with ‘Flowers’, an exhibition in London, UK – Part 2

A flowery start to Spring with ‘Flowers’, an exhibition in London, UK – Part 2

Here we are with the second part of the exhibition ‘Flowers’ that I have been to in London.

If you have not caught the first part, it is here.

We go back straight to the fashion and textiles section of the exhibition with these garments with glass beads, sequine and tulle decorations:

There are two mannequins with tight fitting outfits with flower motifs on a white raised platform
Sorcha O’Raghallaigh’s take on the theme of Flora.

This can be another take on the traditional very feminine flowery lace clothing:

A photo of a person with their head and upper body covered in black flowery lace, on a white wall
This lace seems a tad oppressive..we can undoubtedly think about the meaning of this Girl in Lace, photo by Kent Baker of a high fashion dress by Alexander McQueen, 1996. I like how the edges of the lace around the shoulders are very organic.

And what about these flowery high end sandals?

A pair of black sandals with long straps full of flower shapes are on a raised platform
Manolo Blahnik’s take on the theme, also 1996.

There was also some artistic experimentation on recycled textiles, such as this on Denim:

On a wooden board supported by a wooden shelf there is a flower artwork made of embroidered denim
Embroidered Denim on tea-stained fabric by Stephanie Comilang. I feel that the mounting on a solid wood board requiring a supporting shelf seems more like a statement of some kind than actual necessity, as it must make it quite a bit heavier and the whole arrangement bulkier, don’t you think?

And for the milliners:

A mannequin head is sporting a bright pink and salmon flowery headress and cowl in sequins
By Sorcha O’Raghallaigh. Sequins, wire and mesh. Not overly practical, but it seems very Lady of Spring kind of look.

And we can not really finish this fashion show without the wedding dress and jewellery:

A white wedding dress with large hood and colorful flowers coming out of the bustier, on a mannequin on a raised platform. The background is a flowery wallpaper in blue.
Daniel Roseberry designed it for Schiaparelli in 2024, with handpainted leather flowers: I can’t imagine it being very comfy, but surely this is not the only consideration on that special day..
A display case with matching earrings and brooch in the shape of a flower
Flower shapes are Italian jewellery brand Bucellati’s own distinctive mark on the jewellery brands landscape.

Going forward, the exhibition also had a wall of stylized flower prints, all pretty similar in concept and disposition, all apparently making references to the famous ‘Flowers’ series by Andy Warhol:

Two prints of stylized flowers in groups of 4 each on a green wall
The original ‘Flowers’ prints by Andy Warhol that have been hugely reproduced and copied/referenced to since their conception in the 60’s. He used an interesting method to come to this design that he later reproduced in hundreds of prints: he took photos by Patricia Caulfield on a magazine, simplified the images by flattening, cropping and amending the contrast, then screen-printed them or painted them on canvas in different colorways.

Something quirkier in mixed media seems like a parody of our flower veneration when it comes to indoor plants: take the exotic but so very common now Phalaenopsis orchid..

There is an upside down vase of pink orchids on a stand. two persons' backs are behind the stand admiring other artworks on the wall behind the upturned vase.
You could surely do something similar in needlefelt, but this is painted bronze, aluminium steel, and epoxy. By Tony Matelli

Another mixed media artwork that used fabric was this one, that I particularly noticed for its use of colour:

A blue log supports various flowers and mushrooms in artificial colors, on a white stand on a platform.
This mixed media artwork has an interesting choice of colours. Wood, grout, fabric, acrylic paint, resin, polymer clay, metal, wire. By Nathalie Djurberg & Hans Berg

A huge success with kiddies and also adults was this moving structure by William Darrell. The plastic petals were constantly rotating.

A moving installation is in the middle of a room inside a small circular enclosure filled with bark. There are stem-like structures emerging from the bark and supporting moving blade-like petals in different colors. the petals are rotating. In the background there are people looking at other artworks on the walls.
It does not seem much in a photo, its main feature was the moving petals of the flowers.

I post here also this painting because it reminded me of some of Moy Mackay’s artworks in felt, but it is by Vik Muniz in archival paint.

A very colorful painting of a vase of flowers in a black frame.
This is really saturated colours!

And I guess here we come to the very star of the show in my perspective (though by no means to the end of the exhibition, that was huge!): a big immersive installation that I loved, by Rebecca Louise Law, an installation artist based in Wales. It took years of picking up dead flowers and herbs and seed pods, with substantial donations by public parks and private gardens. I can not even imagine the time she must have spent on installing the whole in the gallery, as each dangling strand was carefully tuned in terms of shape and colour: only being inside the room could give an idea of the patient planning of each part.

Some people are exploring an immersive installation of dried flowers and herbs and seed pods dangling from the ceiling.
I could not photograph it in full, as it completely covered the whole room ceiling to floor. There were big arms extending towards different corners of the room, each made of many many single filaments.
Detail of one arm in the installation of dried flowers by Rebecca Louise Law
I can not add too many photos but this may give you a better idea of what I am talking about in terms of individual strands: ridiculous amounts of flowers and herbs just in one of this, all linked with very thin copper wire in long freely moving filaments.

This big installation was about the connection of us humans with the earth, and about meditating on life, death and the space that is between life and death. I found it awe inspiring for the sheer technical challenge of planning and creating it, and I can  not explain the moving feeling that one got by slowly walking in the room and looking up and down at the cascading strands of flowers and herbs with their subtle changes of colours and shapes perfectly paced to create a rhythm in the composition. This aspect could not really come through in my photos, as the variations were too subtle to show well in photos and only being there would do to experience it, unfortunately.

Another artist using real flowers and muted colours, but singularly and to completely different, streamlined effect is Stephen Doherty with this Giclee print:

Giclee print of a single flower in muted pink and black on a white background
By Stephen Doherty.

Interesting was also a small section of the exhibition on the use of flowers in protest, with some photos of historical examples such as this very American one:

Photo of a group of young people offering flowers to uniformed soldiers as part of the anti-Vietnam war protests at the Pentagon in 1967
This was shot in 1967 at the Pentagon by S. Sgt. Albert R. Simpson.

Next was a room about flowers in music, film and literature: the walls were packed with famous album covers and film posters, and display cases were showing books. There are of course hundreds of examples of flowers in any of these fields!

Here I found a nice textile take on the first and most famous fairies books, the ones by Cicely Mary Barker, and I took photos for Leonor (you may remember her post about sewing dolls clothes, if not, read it here):

In the foreground there is a mannequin with a green top and pink skirt and fly-like wings. In the backgrounds there are persons looking at other displays on the walls.
This is Sweet Pea Miniature Costume, created in 2019 (though it feels older to me, due to the muted colours) by Vin Burnham and property of The Frederik Warne and Ladybird Archive.
A wall covered in framed music single covers sporting flowers either in the title or band name or in the picture or both
This is just to give you a rough idea of this room. This is part of the music section.

Following this, there was a room with an interactive installation were weird digital flowers kept being generated by AI in response to people’s movements, becoming by turns luscious alien jungles or more sedated growing stems. It was not very suitable to photos, so we just sat there a while observing and, to be honest but do not tell anybody, gratefully having a rest.

Followed more flowers in various medias, from cut steel to cut paper:

A cut paper composition of dark pink poppies with a white background and a black frame.
By Susan Beech.

I liked this composition of linocut on handmade paper by Grace Gillespie, as it very much linked to the William Morris section that we had already passed in the first half of the exhibition:

A 4 by 3 grid of paper pieces, each printed with flower motifs in bright oranges, reds and pink, with only one blue bird in the upper center piece.
I may find inspiration for printmaking ideas in this..

There was a room on flowers and plants in Science and in Medicine, with botanical drawings and paintings, and also mathematical works inspired by plants and flowers proportions. The room included a Damien Hirst’s work about Valium with spots in the exact shape of daisy seeds, that might be of interested to the more science oriented of us:

A print of dots in different colors forming a circle shape on a white background and with a white frame
Apparently, those are not random dots, but precisely determined. Lambda chromogenic print.

There was also a section on flower gardening and the RHS Chelsea Flower Show, that is a venerable institution started in 1913 and whose first poster has been designed in 1935 by Margaret Calkin James. This section explored (a bit superficially) our relationship with flower growing.

A bit incongrously in my opinion, here there were two glass cases with a kind of morbid take on mixed media flowers, and it maybe says something of me that I want to post a photo of it here for you to collectively say Yuck!

In an upturned glass bowl there are flowers made of small animal bones and teeth.
Yep, it’s animal bones and teeth. How nice. By Emma Witter.

At this point fatigue had totally set in, I am afraid, and I could see that this particular artwork got to us out of proportions.

To react to this and perk up, I tried to get a few more photos only of very bright and uplifting artworks after that!

Four very brightly colored paintings of plants and flowers.
Brightly and riotous like those oils by Mimei Thompson in the New Shoots section of the exhibition.

Cute-pugs-effect warning here:

Painting of two pugs puppies in front of a flower vase.
The title is also pretty funny if your first language is Italian, as it is ‘Gnocchi’ (in Italian that is a type of potato dumplings with no filling). By Ally McIntyre
Six very colorful circular artworks in a 2 by 3 grid.
I really liked this idea for using screenprint on ply in a different shape that does not need any frame at all. I can totally see how those can work well as points of interest in a room even singly. By Jess Wilson.

And with this I think that I will finish on the brightest note, so here is The End, and I hope that you enjoyed a taste of this big exhibition in London, and that it might inspire you in your creative months ahead!

Kiki

http://www.kikistextileart.com

@kiki.textile.art

17 thoughts on “A flowery start to Spring with ‘Flowers’, an exhibition in London, UK – Part 2

  1. Rebecca’s installation is truly jaw-dropping. It must have been wonderful to stand in the room and drink it all in.

    Thank you for posting all your interesting photos with your comments and thoughts. For those of us unable to see the artworks in person it’s lovely to be shown this.

    1. Thank you for your comment, Lyn.
      Seeing it all on the computer is also much less tiring 😄 it was big and packed of many many more artworks than what I have shown, so we were truly exhausted by the end, especially my friend who was with me and has some mobility issues! It was not a free exhibition, but it was worth the money, we thought, and I absolutely loved the room installation by Rebecca Louis Law!

  2. Thanks Caterina for taking us round the rest of the Exhibition. I’m not surprised you were exhausted by the end of it though, and possibly suffering from sense overload.
    I liked the embroidery on the pieces of denim. I didn’t realise that the brown “stuff” behind it was wood until I read to the end caption, I thought that that was the tea stained fabric! I don’t think the textiles would have stood up like that without a fairly stiff backing, though I suppose it didn’t need to be wood.
    I liked the wedding dress too, though I should think that those shoes would be a lot more uncomfortable than the embellishment on the dress. And how do you keep a hood like that up?
    Buccellati’s jewellery looks good, but probably would cost both arms and both legs!
    I’d love to have seen the mixed media flowers with the moving petals. It took me some time before I could see what was holding up the red flower.
    Ms Law’s installation was indeed awe inspiring, and actually, to my irreverent mind, so was the thought of storing all that material while collecting more and then transporting it all to the gallery.
    No yuck from me, I think those animal bone flowers are amazing!
    Thanks again for the trip.
    Ann

    1. Thank you for your comments, Ann! 😅I was thinking along those lines as well about the Rebecca Louise Law installation: I would never had the space to store all of those flowers for the time needed, and transporting them to the gallery must have been interesting as well!

  3. Thank you so much for posting this. It was so wonderful to read, look, contemplate. Such beauty and creativity.

    1. Thank you for your comment! I am glad that you liked it and I managed to share my wonder in viewing it in person.

  4. Wow! I’ve just caught up with visit 1 and visit number 2 and as much as I would like to see this exhibition for myself I’m exhausted just reading about it! Thank you for taking the time to show us around.
    So many interesting exhibits and the work by Rebecca Law is so far off the scale it’s absolutely incredible! A few that have stuck in my mind include the blue topped flowers in the moveable installation, the proportions are so graceful, also the Schiaparelli wedding dress. The bone flowers were fascinating. I could imagine someone simply glancing at the exhibit, not reading the text, and mistaking them for a jar of dried flowers!
    Seeing the Alexander McQueen “Girl in Lace” makes me wonder if it was the inspiration behind some of Diana Nagorna’s designs where she completely covers the models head with felt.
    There was a lot to take in so I’m going to put the kettle on and go through the post again😁

    1. I know, Karen, it was just so much all packed up in a single exhibition! We were knackered when we re-emerged from the building, and the inside cafe was not open so we could not even have a proper break and a cuppa inside! Luckily we found a cafe nearby and had a proper rest before going home. Loads of interesting artworks and ideas, though: definitely worth the trip.

  5. Thank you Caterina for taking me on the trip with you. Some lovely exhibits to spend a long time looking at. My favourite is the dried flowers hanging from the frame/ceiling. Beautiful.
    The millinery creation is a lovely colour and so nice.

    1. I am glad that you liked them, Marie. Both original and enjoyable, each in its own way.

    1. Yes, Ann, I just about managed to fit the main artworks in two long posts! I could probably write a third with the left over photos (and a fourth with what I did not photograph!), but do not be afraid, I am not going to! 😅

  6. Thank you for taking us on a guided tour around the exhibition and giving us a smattering of all the different types of art work related to flowers.

    Rebecca’s took my breath away, it must truly have been a totally immersive experience. As others above, all I could think of was where & how did she collect, store, create and transport all of the zillions of hanging elements….and then if it is to be exhibited elsewhere, all the careful removal, storage and transport = create, install, remove, repeat.

    I hope you have regained your energy and look forward to being taken on your next exhibition tour.

    1. Thanks, Antje.
      I will surely keep up with this streak of visits to exhibitions, as I am really enjoying myself, especially now that I found a couple of people who are keen on exhibitions like me, and I can do a couple per year to get interesting inspiration without vexing too much one friend or the other (or my strenght) 😅

    1. Thank you for your comment, Ruth, and for reading it all through!

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